Water penetration into mixed and un-mixed carbohydrate powders

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Standard

Water penetration into mixed and un-mixed carbohydrate powders. / Ayed, Charfedinne; Bramante, Filippo; Nwaiwu, Ogueri; MacNaughtan, William; Bakalis, Serafim; Foster, Timothy J.

I: Carbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications, Bind 1, 100007, 2020.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Ayed, C, Bramante, F, Nwaiwu, O, MacNaughtan, W, Bakalis, S & Foster, TJ 2020, 'Water penetration into mixed and un-mixed carbohydrate powders', Carbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications, bind 1, 100007. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carpta.2020.100007

APA

Ayed, C., Bramante, F., Nwaiwu, O., MacNaughtan, W., Bakalis, S., & Foster, T. J. (2020). Water penetration into mixed and un-mixed carbohydrate powders. Carbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications, 1, [100007]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carpta.2020.100007

Vancouver

Ayed C, Bramante F, Nwaiwu O, MacNaughtan W, Bakalis S, Foster TJ. Water penetration into mixed and un-mixed carbohydrate powders. Carbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications. 2020;1. 100007. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carpta.2020.100007

Author

Ayed, Charfedinne ; Bramante, Filippo ; Nwaiwu, Ogueri ; MacNaughtan, William ; Bakalis, Serafim ; Foster, Timothy J. / Water penetration into mixed and un-mixed carbohydrate powders. I: Carbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications. 2020 ; Bind 1.

Bibtex

@article{dd0315e7c7714103861b34bef772d613,
title = "Water penetration into mixed and un-mixed carbohydrate powders",
abstract = "Many Industrial food-related processes involve the hydration of powders. The penetration of water in both liquid and vapour forms into carbohydrate powders has been studied using the techniques of low-field Time Domain NMR, Dynamic Vapour Sorption, and optical microscopy. A simplified model of water penetration into powders has been produced, principally derived from NMR measurements. No-mixing, mixing and overmixing conditions were studied. There was concurrently a progressive association of solids with the liquid (not necessarily solubilisation) and hydration behaviour approximated by 2 relaxation components in the case of potato flake and 3 components in the case of pre-gelatinised starch. Microscopic evidence is consistent with this behaviour, and the maintenance of structure in potato flake was evident in contrast to the complete dissolution of pre-gelatinised starch. Vapour rather than water sorption removes any capillarity/water meniscus effect and both pre-gelatinised starch and potato flake showed different levels of surface adsorption and penetration behaviour but with the same time course.",
keywords = "Powder hydration, Carbohydrate, Mixing, Low-resolution NMR, DVS, Microscopy, Pre-gelatinised starch, Potato flake",
author = "Charfedinne Ayed and Filippo Bramante and Ogueri Nwaiwu and William MacNaughtan and Serafim Bakalis and Foster, {Timothy J.}",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1016/j.carpta.2020.100007",
language = "English",
volume = "1",
journal = "Carbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications",
issn = "2666-8939",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Water penetration into mixed and un-mixed carbohydrate powders

AU - Ayed, Charfedinne

AU - Bramante, Filippo

AU - Nwaiwu, Ogueri

AU - MacNaughtan, William

AU - Bakalis, Serafim

AU - Foster, Timothy J.

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Many Industrial food-related processes involve the hydration of powders. The penetration of water in both liquid and vapour forms into carbohydrate powders has been studied using the techniques of low-field Time Domain NMR, Dynamic Vapour Sorption, and optical microscopy. A simplified model of water penetration into powders has been produced, principally derived from NMR measurements. No-mixing, mixing and overmixing conditions were studied. There was concurrently a progressive association of solids with the liquid (not necessarily solubilisation) and hydration behaviour approximated by 2 relaxation components in the case of potato flake and 3 components in the case of pre-gelatinised starch. Microscopic evidence is consistent with this behaviour, and the maintenance of structure in potato flake was evident in contrast to the complete dissolution of pre-gelatinised starch. Vapour rather than water sorption removes any capillarity/water meniscus effect and both pre-gelatinised starch and potato flake showed different levels of surface adsorption and penetration behaviour but with the same time course.

AB - Many Industrial food-related processes involve the hydration of powders. The penetration of water in both liquid and vapour forms into carbohydrate powders has been studied using the techniques of low-field Time Domain NMR, Dynamic Vapour Sorption, and optical microscopy. A simplified model of water penetration into powders has been produced, principally derived from NMR measurements. No-mixing, mixing and overmixing conditions were studied. There was concurrently a progressive association of solids with the liquid (not necessarily solubilisation) and hydration behaviour approximated by 2 relaxation components in the case of potato flake and 3 components in the case of pre-gelatinised starch. Microscopic evidence is consistent with this behaviour, and the maintenance of structure in potato flake was evident in contrast to the complete dissolution of pre-gelatinised starch. Vapour rather than water sorption removes any capillarity/water meniscus effect and both pre-gelatinised starch and potato flake showed different levels of surface adsorption and penetration behaviour but with the same time course.

KW - Powder hydration

KW - Carbohydrate

KW - Mixing

KW - Low-resolution NMR

KW - DVS

KW - Microscopy

KW - Pre-gelatinised starch

KW - Potato flake

U2 - 10.1016/j.carpta.2020.100007

DO - 10.1016/j.carpta.2020.100007

M3 - Journal article

VL - 1

JO - Carbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications

JF - Carbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications

SN - 2666-8939

M1 - 100007

ER -

ID: 316413721